Meandering Thoughts

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When I was a Communications student from 1999-2004 the hot button issue was media consolidation. WSU invited all kinds of people to come to our school to talk about the Telecommunications Act of 1996.

We had Ted Turner, we had the owner of the Oregonian, someone from the Wall Street Journal (has since been bought by Rupert Murdoch), the owner of the Seattle Times … all those people came to tell us the sky was falling as a result of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 - although at the time it didn’t necessarily seem like it!

I remember specifically - the owner of the Seattle Times spoke about the importance of having two newspaper cities. For him it appeared to be a question of values. An old fashioned value … set in stone years before I was even born.

At the time, the Seattle Times was spending a lot of money to keep the Seattle PI afloat. It was some strange agreement between the two and it sounded like once the Times agreed to it, they couldn’t wiggle out of it. After all they weren’t propping up another local paper … they were propping up a newspaper owned by Hearst … Hearst being a huge corporation that owned tons of media outlets.

I always remember thinking this was so strange! The small family owned newspaper was propping up a huge corporation … I remember thinking Hearst was making the Seattle PI fail if only to drive the Seattle Times out of business!

In recent months we’ve had several newspapers fail … The Rocky Mountain News, The Seattle PI, and The San Francisco Chronicle is rumored to be next. What do these three papers have in common?

They are all owned by Hearst!

QUESTION:

So, are these newspapers really failing, or is Hearst trying to cut costs because they are in over their heads with too many media outlets? Does Hearst have a crappy conservative business model? Does Hearst Corporate not understand the markets they operate in?

People are using the internet and blogging/bloggers as a scapegoat for newspapers failing. I don’t think this is the case at all! It’s solely media consolidation. These big corporations are at fault! I hate to sound like the treehugging hippie of the hour, but it’s true people! In every other industry social media technologies are helping savvy businesses expand their reach … but not in the newspaper industry?

It’s because there are too few people are thinking about and trying to solve the problem. Whereas before you might have 500 family owned newspapers in major cities creatively thinking outside the box, now you have a few.

In defense, you might argue that independent newspapers are also cutting jobs and failing across the country.

The Seattle Times just laid off 12% of their workforce. The Oregonian just laid a bunch of people off. High Times Magazine laid people off. Hugh Heffner is just getting laid …

Good for you, you can read the headlines.

However, we’re also in a recession and many businesses are doing the same thing.

While I agree that newspaper businesses might need to think of a newer business model in today’s society - I don’t think the internet is causing them to fail.

Consider this ….

With the creation of MP3’s, another revolutionizing digital technology, we saw the music industry go topsy turvy as well.

It wasn’t because digital technology was the great Satan. It was because the digital technology empowered the people. More people were able to start recording projects because they could afford the equipment to do so. They could send their music through the internet, and MP3’s began mutating into a promotional tool versus a commodity to be bought and sold. The business model changed. New record labels sprouted up all across the nation. With them came new business models and new small businesses owners … creators of the majority of jobs in this country.

The few major labels in existence spent their energy (and money) suing Napster and individual people instead of reinventing their business models. As a result, they were crippled - one by one.

It’s because they got too big. It’s because the power was concentrated in too few.

Kinda like what happened in this financial meltdown, eh?

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So I have been busy gathering up interview questions that I will be asking small business owners and artists alike. My mission is to find new and creative ways people are using social media technologies - and I hope to move away from the drab blogging conversations occurring elsewhere on the blogosphere.

My first victims are my favorites: NANDA!!!

Nanda getting their feet wet ... in social media technology!

Nanda getting their feet wet ... in social media technology!

Kiyota bravely answered over a dozen social media specific questions that might bore a lesser man. I hope to get that information up soon. I also had a great conversation with a friend of mine who works at the Montinore Winery. Additionally, there are several boutiques and artists around Portland that I admire and hope to cover, among them The Snarky Card Chick.

However, I am still working out the questions, my friends.

If you, dear reader, were interviewing a small business or artist - what would you like to know about their social media habits? What is important to you?

ROI! What is the return on investment! Show me the money!!!

Oh jeez, you must be a marketing professional! That is the antithesis of what I hope to discover!

Fine then! I want to know how social media can help me write a better article for Fortune Magazine … I have been lifting from the book Groundswell for the past 8 months and have nowhere else to turn!

Guys, I know - I have had the same reaction every time I open your magazine, and I am shocked every time I see your Ernst & Young and Best Buy case studies.

Check back any time and hopefully you can cover some young entrepreneurs at work!

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I loathe the way most bloggers write about social media technology. I have grown to loathe it over the past year as I have spent my time reading recycled entries about their perspective on social media technology.

“This is the art of listening.”
“You need to fish where the fish are.”
“Build your community….”

While I certainly agree with all those things, it’s time we move past the lame social media jargon and rhetoric and start talking about something more meaningful.

Yeah, like how will these social media companies actually turn a profit.”

NO!!! I don’t want to talk about that either! I don’t care about that and you shouldn’t either! Why should you? If the company fails there will be another up within days to take its place.

People - you need to be focused on how to make these social media technologies work for you. You need to be focused on the communication aspect … you need to be aware how many people are using a given technology, how much they use it, and what they use that for. Free reports of that type of information are available from reputable sources across the world wide web!

TIP OF THE DAY, TIP OF THE HAT

Big huge corporations have the advantage in their ability to spend a tidal wave of MONEY trying to make themselves appear human-like. This is called branding. They want to appear sensual … or exciting … or down-to-earth. They want their product to appear something aside from what it really is … ie, something you may not have heard of and probably didn’t need to begin with!

Small business owners and artists do not need to do such a thing!!! You can use these free social media technologies to talk about yourself … share your personal story … connect with REAL PEOPLE … consumers …

Do it for free! In your spare time!

I’m a small business owner, I have no time to do anything … har har har.”

Can I just say, for the most part, that is BS. I have walked past your little cutesy boutique shop on 23rd street in Portland - I have seen you hunched over your computer looking on eBay or Etsy … don’t give me that crap!

I have started this Wordpress web site not knowing anything about html, php, or css … in weeks I have taught myself how to buy a domain, access a server, upload content to that server … manage the databases - and even tweak the content of the php files!

I’m telling you … small business owner … this stuff is cake, once you get into the ball game.

It’s time to get into the ball game.

Next posting: Twitter … why you might want to consider using it, how you can use it, what benefit you might receive! Also, why IT MIGHT BE A WASTE OF YOUR TIME!

Cheers!

The Neo Com

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I have to admit I was a late bloomer when it came to the rock band Smashing Pumpkins.

My earliest memory of their actual music was probably in ‘98 when my folks took me to Seattle to buy a PA system for my first band.  ‘Bullet With Butterfly Wings’ came over the radio and I remember thinking the sound was a little ‘grungy’ for my taste.  Keep in mind, when I was in high school I was listening to Herman’s Hermits, The Hollies, The Kinks - basically the stuff hipsters listen to now …

My other early experiences with the Smashing Pumpkins came from the kids wearing their tee-shirts who would also wear all black and have crazy black lipstick or white … blush? I don’t know make-up terminology. My buddy Ahren was also given an autographed napkin all five members of the band had signed.

At the time, I just didn’t care. I hadn’t jumped on board.

Yet something propelled me to purchase the album ‘Adore’ my freshman year of college. While other kids were off experimenting with sex and drugs, I was in the corner of some dark room tasting new music.

The release of Adore has the reputation among the SP elite to have immediately divided the flock. The hardcore enthusiasts were looking for something more like the earlier albums Gish or Siamese Dream whereas kids like me were discovering the band for the first time.

My Fav SP Album - but Im not editorializing here

My Fav SP Album - but I'm not editorializing here


Adore soon became one of my favorite albums. I stopped listening to Herman’s Hermits – and I fell asleep listening to Adore almost every night for a year. The album is pure brilliance.

During the summer after my freshman year of college my roommate was leaving for Europe and needed to get some extra money for his trip. I had the fortune of taking advantage of his need for cash by purchasing his copies of the albums Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness and Pisces Iscariot. They too became among my favorite albums. I moved to Gish and even bought a rare B-side compilation.

I bought Machina the day it came out, and when Zeitgeist came out in 2007 I bought it as well.

I remember the day. Scotty and I were on tour with our previous band (in Minneapolis several days before the bridge collapse I might add) and had hyped the album amongst ourselves for the 10 days proceeding the release date. We listened to the song Doomsday Clock over and over and tried desperately to get into the rest of the album. However Zeitgeist was a little extreme for my taste and I personally miss the more musical arrangements.

Adore continues to be the one that draws me back … the melodies … the memories … the rhythms … the dynamics … the lyrics … the places it takes me back to.

Yesterday I subscribed to the brand new Smashing Pumpkins newsletter. It has been created to communicate with fans regarding the tremendous task of going through their archives. I can only imagine how much material accumulates in 20+ years of creating and recording music.

They are considering starting a subscription service for the most hardy of their fans. For say, $300 per year, you could be among the first to hear unreleased tracks, live recordings, etc etc etc. I think this is a very creative way to market and promote your band in your music in the new economy – and in the advent of new social media technologies.

From Frank Quinta:

“I want to expand on Billy’s idea of a subscription service that I mentioned in the blog. Going through and finding material that is suitable for release is a very in-depth process. The idea of a subscription service is where you can sign up for a yearly subscription, and in return you will receive a guaranteed number of tracks and releases. These releases will be from all eras of the band. Some items may not be up to the quality of a professional release, and may be rawer sounding. This could mean a track of the band rehearsing that might not sound good enough for the general population, but Billy might say that it would be good for the subscription service. We would put it up because that is the only version of that song. This is for the type of fan that is interested in getting unreleased live and studio tracks. This is the Holy Grail. One example is that you’ll pay $300 for the subscription, and we’ll give you 200 releases. For those of you who don’t want to sign up for a subscription, we’ll still sell some material to you, but the subscription members will get it first. If you don’t want to purchase anything, we are also looking at distributing some material for free. Basically, if you want to get everything, you want to take a look at the subscription service.”

I will be interested to see how many people can afford a subscription? Will they entice people with a smaller monthly fee? Is there enough of a demand for these materials?

Regardless, I’m just excited because I read they might release an unfinished Adore documentary. For the album that started my long and wonderful relationship with the band Smashing Pumpkins, I welcome that release and I admire the creativity with which they approach this situation and the new climate in the recording industry.

For more information: http://www.smashingpumpkins.com/

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I’m settling into Saturday night watching the movie, The Good German featuring George Clooney.  So far, Tobey Macguire isn’t playing a very convincing adult and I don’t know what is happening because I am blogging like a dork.

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You should see the place when it rains!

The neighborhood seems to be depressed.  The antique store next door hasn’t been open for weeks.  Neither has the coffee shop.

Both businesses have interesting stories to tell.  The antique store features hand picked items from various eras and of different styles.  The owner brings in puppies from her farm and tells me stories about hopping on  planes to visit distant wind farms across the midwest.

The coffee shop doesn’t even have your token ‘cup of coffee.’  Each beverage is hand crafted in a style representing various regions of Europe and Asia Minor.  I ordered a coffee one day and watched as he maneuvered and cranked half a dozen machines to craft the perfect beverage.

The barista spends tons of energy writing about his technique on the menu - explaining the history of both the brew and the culture from whence it came. Yet he has irregular hours.  He doesn’t have a Web site to promote his hours … he doesn’t have a web presence at all, and the materials taped to the window of his shop give no notice to the thirsty neighbor.  It’s as though his 11-5 schedule is more of a guess, and only he holds the answer.

My girlfriend and I secretly hope he is laundering money for some underground Russian mob or Eastern European organization - just to add a little character to the hood.

Whatever the case, both have a story to tell.  Neither have a web presence.  Neither have a budget for one.  Both can do it for free using blogger or Wordpress.  Both can compliment that presence, dipping into various social media communities, and direct them back to their blogstation.  They can use SEO to attract other patrons who may be drifting aimlessly through various search engines on the world wide web.  They can network with other small businesses doing the very same thing from cities across America.

Exchange information.  Share secrets.

The marketplace of ideas.  Networking.

I would like to see the whole neighborhood blogging about their businesses.  Twittering about their specials or sales.

“$1 Irish Cream Latte on St. Paddy’s Day.”

If they band together - use the buddy system - expand their reach…

Like a community.

Online, and in real life … who knows?

Bring back a little life to the hood.

Just in time for the trees and flowers to greet them.

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